Quad4_72
AI-EE-YAH!
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2006
- Messages
- 6,354
Well then - if that's the case, let's postulate probabilities.
Is it more probable that this situation will occur and that, just once, a gun will save your life, or that the gun will fall into criminal hands, cause an accidental death or wounding, backfire, break or just plain fail to work.
We're not talking absolutes, but your reason for owning a gun works in only a vanishingly rare case, whereas, as we know, guns falling into the wrong hands, or causing accidents, or being used in anger rather than defence is far more frequent.
I'll come back to something I mentioned earlier - are you, as an individual, generally more or less safe if guns are easily available to everyone? Extrapolating that idea, are societies more or less safe if guns are easily available to everyone?
The downsides of widespread gun ownership is increased criminal gun ownership and increased accidental deaths from firearms, amongst others. The upsides are protection for the individual in a very rare and unlikely set or circumstances in which no other tactic would be as effective as a personal firearm.
Do you want a society where we all work together to be safer, or so you want one where it's each to his own, and the one with the biggest arsenal wins?
I know which one I'd pick.
You seem to have avoided the question. Very sly, but I will ask it again and hopefully you will answer it this time. In the situation I described, if you were well trained with a handgun, heard an attacker come into your home and this attacker has the intent to kill, do you or do you not think that a gun would be useful? REMEMBER, this is not one of those British criminals that are all polite and ask kindly if they can rob you. This is someone who WILL kill you if he can.